Yeah, the show was never the same after Bill Oakley and Josh Weinstein left to make Mission Hill in the late 90s. Additionally, Futurama became a primary though to people like Groening so Simpsons suffered stagnation majorly.
Mission Hill is good, but had a very short run. I didn’t know it when it first aired, but watched it when it was part of Cartoon Network’s “Adult Swim” block. It’s about a naive dork teenager, Kevin, moving in with his lazy older brother Andy, in the city. The art style is unique, vividly colored and eye-catching. Two of the characters are an elderly gay couple, treated like normal people (which wasn’t common at the time the show was made.) And of course, being written by Bill Oakley and Josh Weinstein, it’s pretty funny.
I’d say it’s worth a watch. It’s only 13 episodes long, so it’s easy to binge.
Can’t blame them for wanting to make their own thing, and they did a pretty good job (even if the TV stations kind of fucked them over by putting them on some bad timeslots.) Overall, I’m glad the show exists.
Art director for Mission Hill went on to work as a director for Disney (also one of the first women to work as a sole-director at Disney, coincidentally) and Bill Oakley / Josh Weinstein continued to work as writers, so I think it worked out for most parties involved in the production.
Yeah, the show was never the same after Bill Oakley and Josh Weinstein left to make Mission Hill in the late 90s. Additionally, Futurama became a primary though to people like Groening so Simpsons suffered stagnation majorly.
I’ve literally never heard of mission hill. Sounds like they should have stayed on The Simpsons
Mission Hill is good, but had a very short run. I didn’t know it when it first aired, but watched it when it was part of Cartoon Network’s “Adult Swim” block. It’s about a naive dork teenager, Kevin, moving in with his lazy older brother Andy, in the city. The art style is unique, vividly colored and eye-catching. Two of the characters are an elderly gay couple, treated like normal people (which wasn’t common at the time the show was made.) And of course, being written by Bill Oakley and Josh Weinstein, it’s pretty funny.
I’d say it’s worth a watch. It’s only 13 episodes long, so it’s easy to binge.
No way, I loved that show. It was great but flew under the radar.
Can’t blame them for wanting to make their own thing, and they did a pretty good job (even if the TV stations kind of fucked them over by putting them on some bad timeslots.) Overall, I’m glad the show exists.
Art director for Mission Hill went on to work as a director for Disney (also one of the first women to work as a sole-director at Disney, coincidentally) and Bill Oakley / Josh Weinstein continued to work as writers, so I think it worked out for most parties involved in the production.